Acevedo-Canabal Agnes, Colón-Cruz Luis, Rodriguez-Morales Roberto, Varshney Gaurav K, Burgess Shawn, González-Sepúlveda Lorena, Yudowski Guillermo, Behra Martine
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Medical Sciences Campus, University of Puerto Rico (MSC-UPR), San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Institute of Neurobiology, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2019 Jun 14;4(2):88-101. doi: 10.1089/can.2018.0025. eCollection 2019.
The cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2) was previously implicated in brain functions, including complex behaviors. Here, we assessed the role of CB2 in selected swimming behaviors in zebrafish larvae and developed an upscalable whole-organism approach for CB2 ligand screening. Using CRISPR-Cas9 technology, we generated a novel null allele ( ) and a stable homozygote-viable loss-of-function (CB2-KO) line. We measured in untreated wild-type and larvae, photo-dependent (swimming) responses (PDR) and center occupancy (CO) to establish quantifiable anxiety-like parameters. Next, we measured PDR alteration and CO variation while exposing wild-type and mutant animals to an anxiolytic drug (valproic acid [VPA]) or to an anxiogenic drug (pentylenetetrazol [PTZ]). Finally, we treated wild-type and mutant larvae with two CB2-specific agonists (JWH-133 and HU-308) and two CB2-specific antagonists, inverse agonists (AM-630 and SR-144528). Untreated CB2-KO showed a different PDR than wild-type larvae as well as a decreased CO. VPA treatments diminished swimming activity in all animals but to a lesser extend in mutants. CO was strongly diminished and even more in mutants. PTZ-induced inverted PDR was significantly stronger in light and weaker in dark periods and the CO lower in PTZ-treated mutants. Finally, two of four tested CB2 ligands had a detectable activity in the assay. We showed that larvae lacking CB2 behave differently in complex behaviors that can be assimilated to anxiety-like behaviors. Mutant larvae responded differently to VPA and PTZ treatments, providing evidence of CB2 modulating complex behaviors. We also established an upscalable combined genetic/behavioral approach in a whole organism that could be further developed for high-throughput drug discovery platforms.
大麻素受体2(CB2)先前被认为与包括复杂行为在内的脑功能有关。在此,我们评估了CB2在斑马鱼幼体特定游泳行为中的作用,并开发了一种可扩展的全生物体方法用于CB2配体筛选。利用CRISPR-Cas9技术,我们生成了一个新的无效等位基因( )和一个稳定的纯合子可存活功能缺失(CB2-KO)品系。我们在未处理的野生型和 幼体中测量了光依赖性(游泳)反应(PDR)和中心占有率(CO),以建立可量化的焦虑样参数。接下来,我们在将野生型和突变动物暴露于抗焦虑药物(丙戊酸 [VPA])或致焦虑药物(戊四氮 [PTZ])的同时测量PDR改变和CO变化。最后,我们用两种CB2特异性激动剂(JWH-133和HU-308)以及两种CB2特异性拮抗剂、反向激动剂(AM-630和SR-144528)处理野生型和突变幼体。未处理的CB2-KO与野生型幼体表现出不同的PDR,并且CO降低。VPA处理使所有动物的游泳活动减少,但突变体减少的程度较小。CO显著降低,在突变体中甚至更明显。PTZ诱导的反向PDR在光照期明显更强,在黑暗期较弱,并且在PTZ处理的突变体中CO更低。最后,四种测试的CB2配体中有两种在该测定中具有可检测的活性。我们表明,缺乏CB2的幼体在可归类为焦虑样行为的复杂行为中表现不同。突变幼体对VPA和PTZ处理的反应不同,这为CB2调节复杂行为提供了证据。我们还在全生物体中建立了一种可扩展的遗传/行为联合方法,该方法可进一步用于高通量药物发现平台的开发。